Product OverviewAerocool Quartz Pro Full Tower ChassisBuild a rig your friends envy in this tempered glass full tower PC case. The Quartz Pro includes three RGB Fans (P7-F12) with tempered glass on the side and on the front panel. Showcase 16.8 million colours, with 4 colour modes using the RGB Controller (Project7 – Hub1) software. You can simultaneously control and monitor up to five fans via the P7-H1 which also includes a fan RPM controller switch. The hub helps convert PWM signal from the motherboard allowing you to control even a 3-pin fan. The Quartz Pro is designed to have maximum airflow support with up to 10 fan slots available for installation. If liquid cooling is your thing, then install your choice of 240 or 360 radiator in the front, side or top panel. Install extra-long graphics cards up to 470mm and 185mm tall for CPU cooler. It comes with steel HDD trays that have anti-vibration pads and supports up to four 3.5” HDDs and three 2.5” HDDs/SSDs. Easily fit a PSU up to 200mm and for improved cable management there’s ample space of 36.6mm where you need it. For easy cleaning and improved maintenance, the dust filters for the PSU and the front are easily removable. Features
• 16.8 million colours and 4 colour modes with Aerocool P7-H1 (Project7 – Hub1) software.• Simultaneously control and monitor up to five PWM fans via P7-H1 (Project7-Hub1).• Full tempered glass front and side panels to showcase your rig.• Includes three RGB P7-F12s (Project 7 – Fan12cm).• 36.6mm of space for better cable management.• Includes fan RPM controller switch.• Steel HDD tray with anti-vibration pad.• Supports high-end graphics cards up to 470mm.• Supports CPU cooler up to 185mm.• Supports 240 or 360 radiator in the front, side or top panel.• Supports up to four 3.5” HDDs and three 2.5” HDDs/SSDs.• Supports PSU up to 200mm.• Maximum Air cooling support with up to 10 fans.

The modern PC is potentially a mass of heat output and heat production hot spots. With CPUs rated at more than 100W of heat output, single graphics boards carrying similar ratings (and people want to run two!), multiple hard drives the norm, lots of memory and mainboards covered in heatpipes to combat toasty core logic and PWM circuits, a PC appreciably warming up a room when it’s working hard is no joke.

Watercooling for the PC has been around for years in some form or another, for at least as long as Scan have been in business, with basic physics defining why you want to use it. That means for air cooling, to cope with increasing temperature in the heatsink you need to move the air across it faster. That is why thermostatically controlled fans in your PC will turn faster the hotter something gets.